Wehrmacht
Kasernes in the Garmisch and Berchtesgaden areas before 1945(German
Post cards)

Krafft-von-Delmensingen
Kaserne, Garmisch-
after the war, redesignated by the US Army as Artillery Barracks

Jäger
Kaserne, Garmisch-
after the war, redesignated by the US Army as Sheridan BarracksToday,
the facilities of the George
C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies encompass
both the Sheridan and Krafft von Dellmensingen (KvD) Kasernes. Sheridan
Kaserne, originally named Jaeger Kaserne, was constructed in 1937
to house German Wehrmacht troops. The U.S. Army first used the installation
in 1945 as a prisoner-of-war camp for officers. The Headquarters of
the First Mountain Division of the new German Bundeswehr was located
on the Kasernes from 1960 – 1992. The installation became home to
the Garmisch U.S. Military Community, the headquarters of the Armed
Forces Recreation Center (AFRC) and the former U.S. Army Russian Institute
in May 1964. In June 1992, the facilities on Sheridan Kaserne transferred
to the new George C. Marshall Center.

Platterhof Hotel,
Obersalzberg (Garmisch)-
after the war, redesignated by the US Army as the General Walker HotelFor more
information and photos see Geoff Walden's Third
Reich in Ruins

Gebirgsjäger
Kaserne, Mittenwald-
after the war, redesignated by the US Army as Jaeger Kaserne

Gebirgsjäger
Kaserne, Mittenwald

Gebirgsjäger
Kaserne, Mittenwald

Gebirgsjäger
Kaserne, Mittenwald

Gebirgsjäger
Kaserne, Berchtesgaden-
after the war, redesignated by the US Army as Strub Kaserne

Gebirgsjäger
Kaserne, Berchtesgaden-
after the war, redesignated by the US Army as Strub Kaserne; mountain in
background is Untersberg

Gebirgsjäger
Kaserne, Berchtesgaden

Gebirgsjäger
Kaserne, Berchtesgaden

Hötzendorf Kaserne,
Oberammergau-
after the war, redesignated by the US Army as Hawkins Barracks

Hötzendorf Kaserne,
Oberammergau

Hötzendorf Kaserne,
Oberammergau - main
gate seen from within the kaserne